Abstract

The subpopulation spectrum of killer cluster lymphocytes in peripheral blood was assessed by flow cytometry in combination, along with analysis of clinical manifestations in 30 adult patients (12 males and 18 females, mean age 37.512.3 years) diagnosed with common variable immunodeficiency (CVID). All the patients were observed at the Department of Immunopathology and Allergology at the State Institution Republican Scientific and Practical Center of Radiation Medicine and Human Ecology (Gomel, Republic of Belarus). The diagnosis was based on clinical and laboratory criteria developed by the European Society for Immunodeficiencies, using Common Variable Immunodeficiency Diagnostic Criteria, 2020. The patients were examined in the apparent absence of infectious inflammatory disease, prior to monthly immunoglobulin injections. The control group consisted of 30 healthy subjects, comparable in age and sex with the patients cohort, free of clinical and laboratory signs of immunological insufficiency. The patients with CVID had a reduced content of NK cells (CD3-CD16+CD56+) and CD3-CD8+ lymphocytes in peripheral blood (p% = 0.009, rabs = 0.03 and p%, abs 0.001 respectively), along with increase of T cytotoxic cells and NKT lymphocytes (CD3+CD8+; p% = 0.02, rabs = 0.009 and CD3+CD16+CD56+; p%, 0.001, rabs = 0.004, respectively). Severe NK cell lymphopenia showed inverse correlation with the numbers of T cyclers (rs% = -0.545, p = 0.03), activated T cytotoxic lymphocytes (CD3+CD8+CD38+; rs% = -0.38, p = 0.04), and directly correlated with CD3-CD8+ cell counts (rs% = 0.481, p = 0.008). We also revealed a correlation between the parameters of killer lymphocyte cluster (CD3-CD16+CD56+, CD3-CD8+, CD3+CD16+CD56+) and severity of clinical manifestations in CVID patients. The most pronounced changes in the killer cell subpopulations were observed in patients with a combined clinical phenotype infection syndrome + autoimmune syndrome and infection syndrome + autoimmune syndrome + enteropathy. Thus, the marked changes of killer cell subpopulations manifesting as decreased counts of NK cells and CD3-CD8+ lymphocytes, along with increased NKT lymphocytes and T killer numbers are associated with more severe clinical phenotypes of CVID and, above all, with development of autoimmune disorders.

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